It's essential to fix this Permanent Fund oversight

With the Permanent Fund now at the half-century mark, and the fund’s assets near $90 billion, the need for legislative oversight is greater than at any time in our history. Alaskans would better understand the operations and investment choices of the fund if we take steps now to create a transparent and functioning review process that protects the fund and the public.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Diversification, not just S&P 500, is what Permanent Fund needs

Those claiming the Permanent Fund must be doing something wrong because it has not matched the gains of the S&P 500 in the past few years are missing something.

Aside from acting as if perfect hindsight is a roadmap for the future, they are also blind to the need for diversification, which lowers the risk during those periods when specific targets, including the S&P 500, collapse in value.

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Dermot Cole Comments
Sure-fire plan to preserve the Permanent Fund

Keeping the Permanent Fund permanent means reducing the amount we withdraw from it each year.

Instead of taking our 5 percent a year, put a schedule in place to reduce it to 4.5 percent by 2033. Keeping more money in the fund is the best way to improve the chances of future growth, a lesson we should have learned years ago from the Norwegians.

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Dermot Cole Comments